Tuesday, 9 August 2016

Brent proposes to combine Health Visitor and School Nurse services

A paper going to Cabinet on
Monday proposes the procurement of a new 'joined up' 0-19 Health Visitor and
School Nursing Service with a combined value of £6.6m.

Currently the Health Visitor and Family Nurse Service is provided by London
North West Healthcare Trust and School Nursing by Central London NW Healthcare
Trust.

There have been concerns, some of which I voiced in a delegation to Cabinet,
about the lack of continuity between health visiting and school nursing, at the
point where children start nursery. Early Years practitioners have found children
arrive at nursery or reception with specific special needs that they haven't
been informed about in advance.

One of the issues has been that engagement with health visitor services is not
mandatory and that missed appointments are not followed up. Health Visitors are
often the first people to become aware of a family's other needs. The paper LINK states:

...The successful Provider will
be required to demonstrate how their services and the staff teams employed will
be pro-active and engage with families and their under 5s to support health
needs and link into wider issues including housing, education, childcare,
welfare and poverty.

The service to be procured as
outlined in this report will lead to the delivery of the Healthy Child
Programme - the early intervention and prevention public health programme
issued by the Department of Health which lies at the heart of universal
services for children and their families. The early years are a crucial stage
of life, and this service will provide an invaluable opportunity to identify
families who are in need of additional support and children who are at risk of
poor outcomes.

To improve continuity across the
services and age ranges, the Council is planning to combine health visiting and
school nursing service so that professionals will be able to continue to work
with the same children for a longer period of time rather than passing them to
another service as they get older. This will improve the continuity for
children and young people and their families.

By commissioning these services
together professionals will no longer be bound by the traditional age ranges of
services, and both children and families can benefit by receiving support from
the same professional for longer. It will also be expected to realise
efficiencies through economies of scale and overhead and management costs.

The 'efficiencies' referred
to in the last sentence are clearly something to scrutinise in the context of
the impact of cuts on services but the joined up approach is something to be
welcomed. The health of Under 5s was a matter of great concern in a report to
Cabinet in January this year LINK.

There are an estimated 24,600
under 5s in Brent, an increase of 2,500 on 2010, but the rate of increase is
expected to slow over the next few years. The resident population of 0-19 year
olds is expected to increase by almost 10% over the next 5 years.

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